NYT > Home Page: Tsunami Causes Damage, Possible Deaths, on Solomon Islands

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Tsunami Causes Damage, Possible Deaths, on Solomon Islands
Feb 6th 2013, 06:37

AUCKLAND, New Zealand — A powerful 8.0 magnitude earthquake caused a tsunami that sent strong waves crashing into several South Pacific islands, with officials in the Solomon Islands fearful that some residents had lost their lives.

The earthquake prompted tsunami warnings and watches from several island chains to Australia and later New Zealand, but many of those were later canceled.

The low-lying Solomon Islands, however, were not spared. George Herming, a government spokesman, said the tsunami sent two nearly five-foot waves into the western side of Santa Cruz Island, damaging at least 50 homes.

The police commissioner of the islands, John Lansley, said his patrols reported that at least four people and perhaps more were likely killed by the waves and ensuing flooding.

Richard Dapo, a school principal on an island near Santa Cruz, told the Associated Press that he had been getting calls from families on the coast whose homes had been damaged by the waves. 

"I try to tell the people living on the coastline, 'Move inland, find a higher place. Make sure to keep away from the sea. Watch out for waves,'" he said.

The earthquake struck around 11 a.m. local time in the Santa Cruz Islands. There were conflicting reports as to the depth of the quake.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said the tsunami warning was limited to the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Tuvalu, New Caledonia, Kosrae, Fiji, Kiribati, and Wallis and Futuna.

A lesser alert, a tsunami watch, was declared for American Samoa, Australia, Guam, the Northern Marianas, New Zealand and eastern Indonesia.

The earthquake was not only powerful but also shallow, which gave it significant potential to cause damage, said Barry Hirshorn, a geophysicist with the National Weather Service in Hawaii. Moreover, it was a thrust earthquake, he said, meaning that the sea floor moved up or down, not sideways, contributing to the potential for a dangerous tsunami.

But after the earthquake, as scientists watched to see how far a tsunami might spread, there were few early indications of a major threat beyond the immediate area, Mr. Hirshorn said. A water rise of about three feet had been observed close to the quake, he said, still high enough to be potentially damaging but probably not big enough to threaten distant shores.

In New Zealand, thousands of people were at the beach, swimming in the sea on a glorious summer afternoon on Waitangi Day, a national holiday — quite oblivious to the potential for a tsunami. Tsunami sirens were set off late in the afternoon there, and people in coastal areas were being told to stay off beaches and out of the sea, rivers and estuaries.

The New Zealand Herald reported Wednesday afternoon on its Web site that tsunami sirens in Suva, the capital of Fiji, had been warning people to stay inside or go to higher ground.

The Sydney Morning Herald reported on its Web site on Wednesday that the Solomon Islands' National Disaster Management Office had advised those living in low-lying areas, especially on Makira and Malaita, to move to higher ground.

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NYT > Home Page: Midland City Wins Its Battle With Kidnapper

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Midland City Wins Its Battle With Kidnapper
Feb 6th 2013, 02:35

Mark Wallheiser/Getty Images

A sign in Midland City welcoming Ethan home. A world of pot luck dinners and prayer meetings joined with elite law enforcement for a happy ending.

MIDLAND CITY, Ala. — In the front seat of Bus 04-02 sat a boy named Ethan.

The driver, a quiet 66-year-old man named Charles Albert Poland Jr., assigned him the seat because that's where he wanted younger children and those with behavioral problems. Ethan, who according to a great-uncle had already experienced a share of turmoil in his short life, had been found to have Asperger's syndrome. So he sat up front. He even had a name tag on his seat.

It seems unthinkable that even a man with a conspiratorial bent like Jimmy Lee Dykes, Ethan's kidnapper, would bear a violent impulse against the familiar small-town universe of school buses and name tags. And it seems hard to imagine, in turn, that this universe could stand up under Mr. Dykes's sort of violence. But over the past week, as the world of pot luck dinners and prayer meetings joined with the lethal efficiency of elite law enforcement, Mr. Dykes fought and lost.

"I'm happy that the baby is back with his parents," said the Rev. Melvin White of Clio Community Church, who had hauled two barbecue smokers to the scene of the standoff to make ribs for reporters and anyone else who happened by. "Sometimes we forget how crazy the world is until this happens here."

Sheriff Wally Olson of Dale County was home with a cold when he got a page that a gunman was on a school bus. By the time he was on the road, the news had changed. The driver was dead and, while 20 children had escaped because of his actions, the killer had taken a child into an underground bunker.

From the beginning, Mr. Dykes wanted to talk. According to local officials who had been briefed on the operation, Mr. Dykes was demanding a TV news reporter, preferably a woman, and a camera operator to whom he could deliver his message. Exactly what he was going to declare was unclear, though he had long harangued his neighbors with diatribes about the government and the inviolability of his property.

Early ideas were proposed and dropped. Filming the scene from across the highway was a man named Rickey Stokes, a local bail bondsman who runs a blog on happenings in the area,
RickeyStokesNews.com. Officials invited Mr. Stokes over, and discussed having him either go into the bunker with a camera and a gun, or teach a female F.B.I. agent to use his camera and go in.

Both of those notions were scrapped quickly. In any case, Mr. Dykes, wary of being tricked, insisted that his speech be live-streamed, not prerecorded.

Kirke Adams, the district attorney for Dale County who had been called to the scene from coaching high school girls' soccer practice, said Mr. Dykes never gave an inch.

"The demand he made was impossible to accomplish in the way he wanted it done," Mr. Adams said. "And he would accept no alternative." He added, "It was the consensus of the experts that this was going to be a long haul."

As the days wore on, the operations on Private Road 1539 grew. A bland-looking charter plane full of special agents landed at the little airport outside of town last Wednesday evening, prompting a flurry of local phone calls.

The Destiny Church, which sat down the grassy hill from the bunker, became something of a base of operations. Meals came in shifts: fried chicken, green beans, and macaroni and cheese from the Baptists; casseroles and sweet tea from the Methodists.

"One morning we had a different group of people coming in, a higher group I guess," said Tiffany Melansen, a fifth-grade teacher who helped run the volunteer support efforts. "It got to me that they wanted a big breakfast for them so I ordered 30 Big Breakfasts from McDonald's in addition to the 50 biscuits."

The man and the boy remained in the bunker. Federal agents had managed to smuggle a camera inside, and sent in a phone that Mr. Dykes was instructed to use for communication. But while agents were able to keep watch over Mr. Dykes, he was also able to watch them on the television in his bunker.

Across Highway 231, between a small dirt car lot called Garrett's Automotive and an abandoned building that had once been a strip club, an army of TV trucks began to form. Mr. Dykes's neighbors often wandered over to the cameras to offer their opinions of "the mean man" or "the shovel man" who had menaced those around his patch of soil for nearly two years. Mr. Dykes could see these interviews, too, and, according to people familiar with the operation, was not happy about it.

A version of this article appeared in print on February 6, 2013, on page A14 of the New York edition with the headline: Small Town Wins Its Standoff With a Kidnapper .

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With Brennan Pick, a Light on Drone Strikes’ Hazards


Khaled Abdullah/Reuters

Tribesmen on the rubble of a building destroyed on Sunday in an American drone strike against suspected militants in Shabwa Province in southeastern Yemen. 


SANA, Yemen — Late last August, a 40-year-old cleric named Salem Ahmed bin Ali Jaber stood up to deliver a speech denouncing Al Qaeda in a village mosque in far eastern Yemen.

John Brennan
Members of the Kaual tribe in the capital, Sana, on Tuesday.  Two of their relatives died in a drone strike last month, they said.
"He's probably had more power and influence than anyone in a comparable position on the last 20 years." David Benjamin, a former top counterterrorism official at the State Department, speaking about John O. Brennan, President Obama's choice to lead the C.I.A.
It was a brave gesture by a father of seven who commanded great respect in the community, and it did not go unnoticed. Two days later, three members of Al Qaeda came to the mosque in the tiny village of Khashamir after 9 p.m., saying they merely wanted to talk. Mr. Jaber agreed to meet them, bringing his cousin Waleed Abdullah, a police officer, for protection.
As the five men stood arguing by a cluster of palm trees, a volley of remotely operated American missiles shot down from the night sky and incinerated them all, along with a camel that was tied up nearby.
The killing of Mr. Jaber, just the kind of leader most crucial to American efforts to eradicate Al Qaeda, was a reminder of the inherent hazards of the quasi-secret campaign of targeted killings that the United States is waging against suspected militants not just in Yemen but also in Pakistan and Somalia. Individual strikes by the Predator and Reaper drones are almost never discussed publicly by Obama administration officials. But the clandestine war will receive a rare moment of public scrutiny on Thursday, when its chief architect, John O. Brennan, the White House counterterrorism adviser, faces a Senate confirmation hearing as President Obama's nominee for C.I.A. director.
From his basement office in the White House, Mr. Brennan has served as the principal coordinator of a "kill list" of Qaeda operatives marked for death, overseeing drone strikes by the military and the C.I.A., and advising Mr. Obama on which strikes he should approve.
"He's probably had more power and influence than anyone in a comparable position in the last 20 years," said Daniel Benjamin, who recently stepped down as the State Department's top counterterrorism official and now teaches at Dartmouth. "He's had enormous sway over the intelligence community. He's had a profound impact on how the military does counterterrorism."
Mr. Brennan, a former C.I.A. station chief in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, has taken a particular interest in Yemen, sounding early alarms within the administration about the threat developing there, working closely with neighboring Saudi Arabia to gain approval for a secret C.I.A. drone base there that is used for American strikes, and making the impoverished desert nation a test case for American counterterrorism strategy.
In recent years, both C.I.A. and Pentagon counterterrorism officials have pressed for greater freedom to attack suspected militants, and colleagues say Mr. Brennan has often been a restraining voice. The strikes have killed a number of operatives of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the terrorist network's affiliate in Yemen, including Said Ali al-Shihri, a deputy leader of the group, and the American-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.
But they have also claimed civilians like Mr. Jaber and have raised troubling questions that apply to Pakistan and Somalia as well: Could the targeted killing campaign be creating more militants in Yemen than it is killing? And is it in America's long-term interest to be waging war against a self-renewing insurgency inside a country about which Washington has at best a hazy understanding?
Several former top military and intelligence officials — including Stanley A. McChrystal, the retired general who led the Joint Special Operations Command, which has responsibility for the military's drone strikes, and Michael V. Hayden, the former C.I.A. director — have raised concerns that the drone wars in Pakistan and Yemen are increasingly targeting low-level militants who do not pose a direct threat to the United States.
In an interview with Reuters, General McChrystal said that drones could be a useful tool but were "hated on a visceral level" in some of the places where they were used and contributed to a "perception of American arrogance."
Mr. Brennan has aggressively defended the accuracy of the drone strikes, and the rate of civilian casualties has gone down considerably since the attacks began in Yemen in 2009. He has also largely dismissed criticism that the drone campaign has tarnished America's image in Yemen and has been an effective recruiting tool for Al Qaeda.
"In fact, we see the opposite," Mr. Brennan said during a speech last year. "Our Yemeni partners are more eager to work with us. Yemeni citizens who have been freed from the hellish grip of A.Q.A.P. are more eager, not less, to work with the Yemeni government."
Christopher Swift, a researcher at Georgetown University who spent last summer in Yemen studying the reaction to the strikes, said he thought Mr. Brennan's comments missed the broader impact.
"What Brennan said accurately reflected people in the security apparatus who he speaks to when he goes to Yemen," Mr. Swift said. "It doesn't reflect the views of the man in the street, of young human rights activists, of the political opposition."
Though Mr. Swift said he thought that critics had exaggerated the role of the strikes in generating recruits for Al Qaeda, "in the political sphere, the perception is that the U.S. is colluding with the Yemeni government in a covert war against the Yemeni people."
"Even if we're winning in the military domain," Mr. Swift said, "drones may be undermining our long-term interest in the goal of a stable Yemen with a functional political system and economy."
A Parallel Campaign
American officials have never explained in public why the C.I.A. and the Pentagon's Joint Special Operations Command are carrying out parallel drone campaigns in Yemen. Privately, however, they describe an arrangement that has evolved since the frantic, ad hoc early days of America's war there.
The first strike in Yemen ordered by the Obama administration, in December 2009, was by all accounts a disaster. American cruise missiles carrying cluster munitions killed dozens of civilians, including many women and children. Another strike, six months later, killed a popular deputy governor, inciting angry demonstrations and an attack that shut down a critical oil pipeline.
Not long afterward, the C.I.A. began quietly building a drone base in Saudi Arabia to carry out strikes in Yemen. American officials said that the first time the C.I.A. used the Saudi base was to kill Mr. Awlaki in September 2011.
Since then, officials said, the C.I.A. has been given the mission of hunting and killing "high-value targets" in Yemen — the leaders of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula who Obama administration lawyers have determined pose a direct threat to the United States. When the C.I.A. obtains specific intelligence on the whereabouts of someone on its kill list, an American drone can carry out a strike without the permission of Yemen's government.
There is, however, a tighter leash on the Pentagon's drones. According to American officials, the Joint Special Operations Command must get the Yemeni government's approval before launching a drone strike. This restriction is in place, officials said, because the military's drone campaign is closely tied to counterterrorism operations conducted by Yemeni special operations troops.
Yemen's military is fighting its own counterinsurgency battle against Islamic militants, who gained and then lost control over large swaths of the country last year. Often, American military strikes in Yemen are masked as Yemeni government operations.
Moreover, Mr. Obama demanded early on that each American military strike in Yemen be approved by a committee in Washington representing the national security agencies. The C.I.A. strikes, by contrast, resulted from a far more closed process inside the agency. Mr. Brennan plays a role in overseeing all the strikes.
There have been at least five drone strikes in Yemen since the start of the year, killing at least 24 people. That continues a remarkable acceleration over the past two years in a program that has carried out at least 63 airstrikes since 2009, according to The Long War Journal, a Web site that collects public data on the strikes, with an estimated death toll in the hundreds. Many of the militants reported killed recently were very young and do not appear to have had any important role with Al Qaeda.
"Even with Al Qaeda, there are degrees — some of these young guys getting killed have just been recruited and barely known what terrorism means," said Naji al Zaydi, a former governor of Marib Province, who has been a vocal opponent of Al Qaeda and a supporter of Yemen's president, Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi.
Mr. Zaydi, a prominent tribal figure from an area that has long been associated with members of Al Qaeda's Yemeni affiliate, pointed out that the identity and background of these men were no mystery in Yemen's interlinked tribal culture.
A Deadly Ride
In one recent case, on Jan. 23, a drone strike in a village east of Sana killed a 21-year-old university student named Saleem Hussein Jamal and his cousin, a 33-year-old teacher named Ali Ali Nasser Jamal, who happened to have been traveling with him. According to relatives and neighbors of the two men, they were driving home from a nearby town called Jahana when five strangers offered to pay them for a ride. The drone-fired missile hit the vehicle, a twin-cab Toyota Hilux, just outside the village of Masnaa at about 9 p.m. The strangers were later identified in Yemeni news reports as members of Al Qaeda, though apparently not high-ranking ones.
After the strike, villagers were left to identify their two dead relatives from identity cards, scraps of clothing and the license plate of Mr. Jamal's Toyota; the seven bodies were shredded beyond recognition, as cellphone photos taken at the scene attest. "We found eyes, but there were no faces left," said Abdullah Faqih, a student who knew both of the dead cousins.
Although most Yemenis are reluctant to admit it publicly, there does appear to be widespread support for the American drone strikes that hit substantial Qaeda figures like Mr. Shihri, a Saudi and the affiliate's deputy leader, who died in January of wounds received in a drone strike late last year.
Al Qaeda has done far more damage in Yemen than it has in the United States, and one episode reinforced public disgust last May, when a suicide bomber struck a military parade rehearsal in the Yemeni capital, killing more than 100 people.
Moreover, many Yemenis reluctantly admit that there is a need for foreign help: Yemen's own efforts to strike at the terrorist group have often been compromised by weak, divided military forces; widespread corruption; and even support for Al Qaeda within pockets of the intelligence and security agencies.
Yet even as both Mr. Brennan and Mr. Hadi, the Yemeni president, praise the drone technology for its accuracy, other Yemenis often point out that it can be very difficult to isolate members of Al Qaeda, thanks to the group's complex ties and long history in Yemen.
This may account for a pattern in many of the drone strikes: a drone hovers over an area for weeks on end before a strike takes place, presumably waiting until identities are confirmed and the targets can be struck without anyone else present.
In the strike that killed Mr. Jaber, the cleric, that was not enough. At least one drone had been overhead every day for about a month, provoking high anxiety among local people, said Aref bin Ali Jaber, a tradesman who is related to the cleric. "After the drone hit, everyone was so frightened it would come back," Mr. Jaber said. "Children especially were affected; my 15-year-old daughter refuses to be alone and has had to sleep with me and my wife after that."  
Anger at America
In the days afterward, the people of the village vented their fury at the Americans with protests and briefly blocked a road. It is difficult to know what the long-term effects of the deaths will be, though some in the town — as in other areas where drones have killed civilians — say there was an upwelling of support for Al Qaeda, because such a move is seen as the only way to retaliate against the United States.
Innocents aside, even members of Al Qaeda invariably belong to a tribe, and when they are killed in drone strikes, their relatives — whatever their feelings about Al Qaeda — often swear to exact revenge on America.
"Al Qaeda always gives money to the family," said Hussein Ahmed Othman al Arwali, a tribal sheik from an area south of the capital called Mudhia, where Qaeda militants fought pitched battles with Yemeni soldiers last year. "Al Qaeda's leaders may be killed by drones, but the group still has its money, and people are still joining. For young men who are poor, the incentives are very strong: they offer you marriage, or money, and the ideological part works for some people."
In some cases, drones have killed members of Al Qaeda when it seemed that they might easily have been arrested or captured, according to a number of Yemeni officials and tribal figures. One figure in particular has stood out: Adnan al Qadhi, who was killed, apparently in a drone strike, in early November in a town near the capital.
Mr. Qadhi was an avowed supporter of Al Qaeda, but he also had recently served as a mediator for the Yemeni government with other jihadists, and was drawing a government salary at the time of his death. He was not in hiding, and his house is within sight of large houses owned by a former president of Yemen, Ali Abdullah Saleh, and other leading figures.  
Whatever the success of the drone strikes, some Yemenis wonder why there is not more reliance on their country's elite counterterrorism unit, which was trained in the United States as part of the close cooperation between the two countries that Mr. Brennan has engineered. One member of the unit, speaking on the condition of anonymity, expressed great frustration that his unit had not been deployed on such missions, and had in fact been posted to traffic duty in the capital in recent weeks, even as the drone strikes intensified.
"For sure, we could be going after some of these guys," the officer said. "That's what we're trained to do, and the Americans trained us. It doesn't make sense."

Robert F. Worth reported from Sana, and Mark Mazzetti and Scott Shane from Washington.

NYT > Home Page: Scientology Runs Super Bowl Ad

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Scientology Runs Super Bowl Ad
Feb 6th 2013, 02:14

After several months of mounting accusations over the treatment of its members, the Church of Scientology on Sunday tried to spread a softer, gentler message using the biggest advertising event in the country: the Super Bowl.

For the first time, the church bought commercial time in local markets during the Super Bowl in order to feature an ad that called on "the curious, the inquisitive, the seekers of knowledge." The ad, which ran in cities including New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Dallas, was in stark contrast to the more traditional Super Bowl fare from brands like Budweiser, Mercedes-Benz and Coca-Cola.

"Some will doubt you," said the narrator in the ad over soft-focus images of mostly young, ethnically diverse strivers. "Let them. Dare to think for yourself, to look for yourself, to make up your own mind."

Robert Passikoff, the president of Brand Keys in New York, a brand and customer-loyalty consulting company, said he was surprised to see the ad during the game. "Clearly the organization was looking for as broad an audience as it could," he said.

Called "Knowledge," the ad was produced by Golden Era Productions, the Church of Scientology International's own studio, which creates training films and other video content for the church, Karin Pouw, a spokeswoman for the organization said in an e-mail.

The ad itself was not new; a longer version ran on the organization's Web site in November. Ms. Pouw said the ad "would appear on prominent Web sites and air during prime time TV programs over the next several months," and was shown 16 times an hour on a digital billboard in Times Square in December.

"We are thrilled with the response to this advertisement and that so many millions of people were able to see our message," Ms. Pouw said.

The campaign came after several well-publicized attacks on the church's credibility. In October, Vanity Fair published an article detailing the actress Katie Holmes's life in Scientology during her marriage to the church's most visible member, Tom Cruise. In January, Lawrence Wright published his investigative book, "Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood & the Prison of Belief," which takes direct aim at the church's practices and its founder, L. Ron Hubbard.

Ms. Pouw said the ads were not a direct response to Mr. Wright's book.

"There has always been a demand for information about Scientology, and the ads are part of a longer term effort to meet that demand," she said in the e-mail. "We have been running it online for some time and are expanding onto television."

Jeff Sharlet, an assistant professor of English at Dartmouth College who has written about religion and the news media, said the ads were an attempt to position the church as nonconformist and appealing.

"It's what marginal religions are doing more than evangelizing," Mr. Sharlet said. "They are trying to say 'You can trust us.' " Calling the ad "sort of mushy and vague," he compared it to a sentimental commercial from the Chrysler Group extolling the virtues of farmers that also ran during the Super Bowl. Ad agency executives estimated the cost of this year's Super Bowl commercials at $3.7 million to $3.8 million for 30 seconds.

Rohit Deshpande, a professor of marketing at Harvard Business School, said that the ad was trying to be inspirational while saying very little about the organization itself. "The motivation is maybe to get some positive association and to build some curiosity so people will follow up and learn more about what the organization is about," he said.

Scientology has never shied away from promotions. Subway posters and sidewalk invitations to personality testing have long been familiar to those living in New York and other cities around the country. One of the church's highly visible buildings in the Hollywood district of Los Angeles is approached by a public street named for its founder.

In December, the church used the Universal Studios back lot for its annual antidrug footrace and pancake breakfast. About 3,000 athletes participated, it said.

The church has often been accused of being relentless in its treatment of critics, but its leaders seem to have taken a more measured approach recently. When the Weinstein Company last year released "The Master," a film about the founding of a fictional cult that had clear parallels to Scientology, the church largely ignored it. The movie made little impression at the box office, despite critical acclaim and Oscar nominations for three of its actors.

But the church has recently released another ad, this one about Mr. Hubbard himself, which begins by calling him "the nation's youngest Eagle Scout" and ends by calling him "the most published and translated author of all time" and the founder of Scientology. The ad will run in "major metropolitan markets across the country," including New York, Ms. Pouw said.

Laurie Goodstein contributed reporting.

A version of this article appeared in print on February 6, 2013, on page A16 of the New York edition with the headline: Scientology Gets a Crowd For Its Super Bowl Ad.

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NYT > Home Page: Tsunami Generated by 8.0 Quake in South Pacific

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Tsunami Generated by 8.0 Quake in South Pacific
Feb 6th 2013, 02:30

SYDNEY (AP) — A powerful earthquake in the South Pacific generated a tsunami Wednesday that prompting warnings to several island nations.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center says sea level readings indicate a tsunami formed after the 8.0 earthquake near the Solomon Islands and that it may be destructive near the epicenter. More distant coasts may be threatened.

The quake occurred near Lata in Temotu province, the easternmost province of the Solomons, about a 3-hour flight from the capital, Honiara. The region has a population of around 30,000 people.

"There was no immediate report of damages or any accidents," said George Herming, a spokesman for the prime minister. "We've been hoping that reports will come in from the responsible authorities ... very soon."

The tsunami warning is in effect for the Solomons, Vanuatu, Nauru, Papua New Guinea, Tuvalu, New Caledonia, Kosrae, Fiji, Kiribati, Wallis and Futuna. A tsunami watch is in effect for American Samoa, Australia, New Zealand and eastern Indonesia.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake struck 81 kilometers (50 miles) west of Lata, at a depth of 5.8 kilometers (3.6 miles).

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NYT > Home Page: Warm Weather Forces Changes Ahead of Iditarod Race

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Warm Weather Forces Changes Ahead of Iditarod Race
Feb 5th 2013, 20:55

Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Warm Mushing Season: It has been an unusually warm winter in Alaska, and that has caused trouble for mushers and their sled dogs.

WILLOW, Alaska — By 9:30 most mornings here in the world's unofficial dog-sledding capital, Luan Marques has harnessed 10 Alaskan huskies to his sled and shot off into the awakening woods for a training ride, his sights set on the famous Iditarod competition next month.

Mushers at the start of the Northern Lights 300, which was moved from Wasilla, Alaska, to Willow because of trail conditions compromised by warm weather.

The thick, powdery blanket of snow on the trails and the frigid temperatures have made a musher haven out of Willow, where locals joke that dogs outnumber humans. But as Marques rode this winter, he and his huskies trudged over dirt patches and bramble, surrounded by tree branches that once held fluffy snow. Instead of subzero conditions, which are ideal for the sport, temperatures have been in the 30s and 40s.

"It's raining and not snowing," Marques said during a recent training ride, maneuvering the dogs to avoid puddles on the trail. "That's not good."

It has made for a trying winter for mushers. Several Iditarod qualifying events have been postponed, rerouted or canceled because of a lack of snow. The John Beargrease sled dog race, a trek of some 400 miles in northern Minnesota, postponed its start to March 10 from Jan. 27. In Alaska, the Don Bowers Memorial 200/300, the Sheep Mountain Lodge 150 and the Knik 200 have been canceled. The Copper Basin 300 in Glennallen, Alaska, had to cut its trail for several teams by 25 miles because there was not enough snow at the finish line; the mushers finished the race with their hats and gloves off and jackets unzipped.

"That was crazy with the warm weather," said Zack Steer, one of the race's organizers. "It was such a drastic change from last year, but the trail at the end was dirt. It wasn't safe."

Blake Freking, a musher who trains Siberian huskies on the north shore of Lake Superior in Minnesota, said he planned to compete in the Beargrease race in January. "With global warming, it's hard to deny that there are some big changes going on right now," he said. "We're in it. It isn't looking good."

During last year's snow season, defined as July 1, 2011, to June 30, 2012, Anchorage had 134.5 inches of snow, according to Jake Crouch, a climate scientist with the National Climatic Data Center. This season's tally in Anchorage was 39.2 inches, through Wednesday. North of Fairbanks, another area where mushers train, snowpack is 21 percent of average.

"This is a pretty big deal," said Crouch, who is among the climate experts who attribute the conditions to global warming. He said climate change had resulted in warmer temperatures for Alaska over the last century.

"One of the things we're seeing with climate change is that the high latitudes are experiencing the brunt of it," he said. "They're very vulnerable."

Mushing in Alaska originated with Native American settlers and pioneers who traversed the chilly landmass using dog sleds out of necessity. Canine-powered transit was a practical option for transporting fur, medicine, freight, mail and passengers in the snow. Even as airplane travel diverted much from mushers' daily business, the culture endured along with the Iditarod trail, which stretches about 1,000 miles from Anchorage to Nome.

"It definitely has us concerned," Erin McLarnon, a musher and spokeswoman for the Iditarod, said of the long-term effects of the weather. She is among the mushers breeding dogs with thinner coats, more suitable for warmer weather.

The lack of snow especially affects rookie mushers. To qualify for the Iditarod, mushers must complete at least two 300-mile races and additional smaller races to log a total of 750 miles. "There just aren't that many 300-mile races," McLarnon said.

Monica Zappa, a musher based on Alaska's Kenai Peninsula, was among those whose first Iditarod was delayed because qualifying events were canceled. She even had to use an all-terrain vehicle for training rather than a sled for a month longer than usual this season. For the dogs, running on ground that is hard or bumpy "can be like running on a cheese grater," she said.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: February 5, 2013

An earlier version of this article misspelled the site of the Copper Basin 300. It is in Glennallen, Alaska, not Glenallen.

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NYT > Home Page: House G.O.P. Looks at Immigration Plan Without Citizenship

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House G.O.P. Looks at Immigration Plan Without Citizenship
Feb 5th 2013, 19:26

WASHINGTON — House Republicans on Tuesday staked out what they cast as a middle-ground option in the debate over immigration, pushing an approach that could include legalization but not a path to citizenship, as their Democratic counterparts favor, for the 11 million immigrants in the country illegally.

At a House Judiciary Committee hearing exploring an overhaul of the immigration system, the first of several such hearings expected in the House, Representative Robert W. Goodlatte, Republican of Virginia and chairman of the committee, used much of his time to frame what he called "the question of the day" — "Are there options we should consider between mass deportation and a pathway to citizenship for those not lawfully in the United States?" he asked.

The question was later echoed by Representative Lamar Smith, Republican of Texas and a former chairman of the committee, when he asked Mayor Julián Castro of San Antonio, "Do you see any compromise area between the current status quo and a path to citizenship?"

Mr. Castro, whose twin brother, Representative Joaquín Castro, is a newly elected Democratic member from Texas, replied that he felt that a compromise was for the pathway to citizenship to be "an earned pathway."

The Republicans also signaled that they were open to the idea of breaking down immigration legislation into several smaller bills, which would allow them to deal with the question of high-skilled workers, as well as a farmworker program, without addressing what Democrats and immigration advocates say is the larger issue: the 11 million people already in the country.

Representative Spencer Bachus, Republican of Alabama, for instance, said he thought the panelists could all agree that "it's going to be a much easier lift to solve the problem of highly skilled workers."

"When you take comprehensive, then we're dealing with certain issues like full citizenship," he said. "And whatever else we disagree on, I think we would agree on that that's a more toxic and contentious issue, granting full amnesty."

Immigration advocates, who had been eagerly awaiting the hearing for a hint of the tone of the debate on immigration as it unfolds in the House, said the use of the word "amnesty" would probably be a bad sign for those in favor of a comprehensive overhaul.

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